November 18, 2002, Monday

An article in Money & Business on Sunday described the careers of officials and executives after they were fired or forced to resign. It said the corporate world was sometimes less forgiving than the political one. The article cited, as examples of...

Jacques A. Nasser, the former chief executive of the Ford Motor Company, said today that he was joining Bank One's leveraged-buyout arm and would become nonexecutive chairman of its most prominent investment, Polaroid. The announcement puts Mr....

An article last Sunday about the employment contracts of chief executives referred incorrectly to the compensation given to Jacques A. Nasser when he left as chief executive of Ford Motor on Oct. 30, 2001. It was for retirement, not severance.

The Ford Motor Company, seeking to bolster its credibility on Wall Street, is set to elevate another experienced executive, this time from its past. Allan D. Gilmour, who retired as vice chairman of Ford in 1995 and once served as chief financial...

Jacques A. Nasser, the ousted chief executive of the Ford Motor Company, received a compensation package worth $23 million as part of his 2001 pay and retirement. The company lost $5.5 billion last year, its worst performance since 1992.

April 10, 2002, Wednesday

A Michigan judge granted final approval yesterday to a $10.5 million settlement in two discrimination lawsuits filed against the Ford Motor Company by hundreds of current and former employees. The approval, by Judge Edward Thomas of Wayne County...